Randell Cottage Open Day 28 September 2014
Randell Cottage Open Day 28 September 2014
Tucked away
in Thorndon is a wondrous place - full of history and
creativity. Randell Cottage is one of Wellington’s oldest
restored cottages and on Sunday 28 September it will open
its doors to visitors. Volunteers will be on hand to give
tours and tell the stories of this unique dwelling.
If you are attending Spring Festival events across the road at the Botanical Gardens, then why not pop across the road and visit us between 11.00AM and 4.00 PM.
History buffs will enjoy the guided tours and talks about one of Wellington’s 10 oldest buildings.
This beautifully restored cottage is not only an historical icon but continues to create new legacies as host to writers from both France and New Zealand.
Randell Cottage
14 St Mary
St
Thorndon
General Information to:
Check out http://www.randellcottage.co.nz/
or
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/RandellCottage
How to get there:
https://www.google.co.nz/maps/place/14+St+Mary+Street,+Thorndon,+Wellington+6011/@-41.2785626,174.7684189,17z/data=!4m2!3m1!1s0x6d38b1d40bf113ad:0x9fdac94da1fd9020
A little about Randell Cottage.
Historic Randell Cottage in Wellington, New Zealand, has been a writers’ residency for New Zealand and French writers since 2001. The Randell Cottage Writers Trust works in partnership with Creative New Zealand, the Embassy of France, the New Zealand-France Friendship Fund and Wellington City Council.
The cottage has two bedrooms and a writing studio. It is located in inner-city Thorndon close to the Lilburn Residence, Rita Angus Cottage, Wellington Asia Residency, and the Katherine Mansfield Birthplace, and within walking distance of the National and Turnbull Libraries.
History
In 1855 William Randell and his wife Sarah landed at Wellington from the sailing ship Belle Creole. They came as settlers from Dorset. William had been a stonemason (a trade that included bricklaying) and Sarah had been in service as a housemaid. Life for country folk in Dorset was a struggle, and the newly-married couple had very little money and few possessions.
William and Sarah reached Wellington just after the severe 1855 earthquake had wrecked many buildings and left no chimney standing. At once William’s bricklaying skills were in demand to rebuild the fireplaces and chimneys that were at the centre of every dwelling.
The couple were soon settled in a cottage in
Ghuznee Street where they started a family that was to grow
steadily, as Sarah would give birth every second summer for
the next twenty years!
Ten years later the couple managed
to buy a section halfway up St Mary Street, a plot of land
that went right through to Lewisville Terrace. When he found
time William levelled the land and, in 1867, began to build
the modest dwelling that would become the writers’
cottage.
The house was built in ‘settler style’. Two simple wooden sheds gabled at each end were set side by side so that the long inner wall was common to both. Each ‘shed’ had a ridged roof, and the facing surfaces formed a central valley. The front door was in the middle of the east wall, and the back door was set in the centre of the west wall facing the steep Tinakori hill.
In this simple four-roomed home the family grew until there were nine children. In about 1874 William added a third ‘shed’ to form two extra bedrooms. When the tenth child was born in 1877, the six-room cottage was larger than most of Wellington’s houses.
Later, one of the daughters, Harriet, (a celebrated soloist) taught singing in one of these new bedrooms. An outer door was added in the 1880s to allow Harriet’s pupils to come and go without needing to go through the rest of the house: the door can be seen behind Sarah in the photograph below.
In 1994 the cottage was bought by Beverley Randell, her husband Hugh Price, and their daughter Susan. They restored it with as few changes to the original style and ground plan as possible. The cottage was then gifted to the Trust in 2001. The Prices hope that the succession of writers who occupy it will enjoy being reminded of what settlers’ dwellings were like in the mid-nineteenth century.